An
Army at Dawn
The War in North Africa, 1942-1943
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Dawn
Excerpt from An Army at Dawn
Prologue
Twenty-seven acres of headstones
fill the American military cemetery at Carthage, Tunisia. There are no obelisks,
no tombs, no ostentatious monuments, just 2,841 bone-white marble markers, two
feet high and arrayed in ranks as straight as gunshots. Only the chiseled names
and dates of death suggest singularity. Four sets of brothers lie side by side.
Some 240 stones are inscribed with the thirteen of the saddest words in our
language: "Here rests in honored glory a comrade in arms known but to God." A
long limestone wall contains the names of another 3,724 men still missing, and a
benediction: "Into Thy hands, O Lord."
This is an ancient place, built on the ruins of
Roman Carthage and a stone's throw from the even older Punic city. It is
incomparably serene. The scents of eucalyptus and of the briny Mediterranean
barely two miles away carry on the morning air, and the African light is flat
and shimmering, as if worked by a silversmith. Tunisian lovers stroll hand in
hand across the kikuyu grass or sit on benches in the bowers, framed by
orangeberry and scarlet hibiscus. Cypress and Russian olive trees ring the yard,
with scattered acacia and Aleppo pine and Jerusalem thorn. A carillon plays
hymns on the hour, and the chimes sometimes mingle with a muezzin's call to
prayer from a nearby minaret. Another wall is inscribed with the battles where
these boys died in 1942 and 1943 -- Casablanca, Algiers, Oran, Kasserine, El
Guettar, Sidi Nsir, Bizerte -- along with a line from Shelley's "Adonais": "He
has outsoared the shadow of our night."
In the tradition of government-issue graves,
the stones are devoid of epitaphs, parting endearments, even dates of birth. But
visitors familiar with the American and British invasion of North Africa in
November 1942, and the subsequent seven-month struggle to expel the Axis powers
there, can make reasonable conjectures. We can surmise that Willett H. Wallace,
a private first class in the 26th Infantry Regiment who died on November 9,1942,
was killed at St. Cloud, Algeria, during the three days of hard fighting
against, improbably, the French. Ward H. Osmun and his brother Wilbur W., both
privates from New Jersey in the 18th Infantry and both killed on Christmas Eve
1942, surely died in the brutal battle of Longstop Hill, where the initial
Allied drive in Tunisia was stopped -- for more than five months, as it turned
out -- within sight of Tunis. Ignatius Glovach, a private first class in the
701st Tank Destroyer Battalion who died on Valentine's Day, 1943, certainly was
killed in the opening hours of the great German counteroffensive known as the
battle of Kasserine Pass. And Jacob Feinstein, a sergeant from Maryland in the
135th Infantry who died on April 29, 1943, no doubt passed during the epic
battle for Hill 609, where the American Army came of age.
A visit to the Tunisian battlefields tells a
bit more. For more than half a century, time and weather have purified the
ground at El Guettar and Kasserine and Longstop. But the slit trenches remain,
and rusty C-ration cans, and shell fragments scattered like seed corn. The lay
of the land also remains -- the vulnerable low ground, the superior high ground:
incessant reminders of how, in battle, topography is fate.
Yet even when the choreography of armies is
understood, or the movement of this battalion or that rifle squad, we crave
intimate detail, of individual men in individual foxholes. Where, precisely, was
Private Anthony N. Marfione when he died on December 24,1942? What were the last
conscious thoughts of Lieutenant Hill P. Cooper before he left this earth on
April 9, 1943? Was Sergeant Harry K. Midkiff alone when he crossed over on
November 25,1942, or did some good soul squeeze his hand and caress his
forehead?
The dead resist such intimacy. The closer we
try to approach, the farther they draw back, like rainbows or mirages. They
have outsoared the shadow of our night, to reside in the wild uplands of the
past. History can take us there, almost. Their diaries and letters, their
official reports and unofficial chronicles -- including documents that, until
now, have been hidden from view since the war -- reveal many moments of
exquisite clarity over a distance of sixty years. Memory, too, has transcendent
power, even as we swiftly move toward the day when not a single participant
remains alive to tell his tale, and the epic of World War II forever slips into
national mythology. The author's task is to authenticate: to warrant that
history and memory give integrity to the story, to aver that all this really
happened.
But the final few steps must be the reader's.
For among mortal powers, only imagination can bring back the dead.
No twenty-first-century reader can understand the ultimate triumph of the Allied
powers in World War II in 1945 without a grasp of the large drama that unfolded
in North Africa in 1942 and 1943. The liberation of western Europe is a
triptych, each panels informing the others: first, North Africa; then, Italy;
and finally the invasion of Normandy and the subsequent campaigns across France,
the Low Countries, and Germany.
From a distance of sixty years, we can see that
North Africa was a pivot point in American history, the place where the United
States began to act like a great power -- militarily, diplomatically,
strategically, tactically. Along with Stalingrad and Midway, North Africa is
where the Axis enemy forever lost the initiative in World War II. It is where
Great Britain slipped into the role of junior partner in the Anglo-American
alliance, and where the United States first emerged as the dominant force it
would remain into the next millennium.
None of it was inevitable -- not the individual
deaths, nor the ultimate Allied victory, nor eventual American hegemony.
History, like particular fates, hung in the balance, waiting to be tipped.
Measured by the proportions of the later war --
of Normandy or the Bulge -- the first engagements in North Africa were tiny,
skirmishes between platoons and companies involving at most a few hundred men.
Within six months, the campaign metastasized to battles between army groups
comprising hundreds of thousands of soldiers; that scale persisted for the
duration. North Africa gave the European war its immense canvas and implied --
through 70,000 Allied killed, wounded, and missing -- the casualties to come.
No large operation in World War II surpassed
the invasion of North Africa in complexity, daring, risk, or -- as the official
U.S. Army Air Force history concludes -- "the degree of strategic surprise
achieved." Moreover, this was the first campaign undertaken by the
Anglo-American alliance; North Africa defined the coalition and its strategic
course, prescribing how and where the Allies would fight for the rest of the
war.
North Africa established the patterns and
motifs of the next two years, including the tension between coalition unity and
disunity. Here were staged the first substantial tests of Allied landpower
against Axis landpower, and the initial clashes between American troops and
German troops. Like the first battles in virtually every American war, this
campaign revealed a nation and an army unready to fight and unsure of their
martial skills, yet willful and inventive enough finally to prevail.
North Africa is where the prodigious weight of
American industrial might began to tell, where brute strength emerged as the
most conspicuous feature of the Allied arsenal -- although not, as some
historians suggest, its only redeeming feature. Here the Americans in particular
first recognized, viscerally, the importance of generalship and audacity, guile
and celerity, initiative and tenacity.
North Africa is where the the Allies agreed on
unconditional surrender as the only circumstance under which the war could end.
It is where the controversial strategy of first
contesting the Axis in a peripheral theater -- the Mediterranean -- was effected
at the expense of an immediate assault on northwest Europe, with the campaigns
in Sicily, Italy, and southern France following in train.
It is where Allied soldiers figured out,
tactically, how to destroy Germans; where the fable of the Third Reich's
invincibility dissolved; where, as one senior German general later acknowledged,
many Axis soldiers lost confidence in their commanders and "were no longer
willing to fight to the last man."
It is where most of the West's great battle
captains emerged, including men whose names would remain familiar generations
later -- Eisenhower, Patton, Bradley, Montgomery, Rommel -- and others who
deserve rescue from obscurity. It is where the truth of William Tecumseh
Sherman's postulate on command was reaffirmed: "There is a soul to an army as
well as to the individual man, and no general can accomplish the full work of
his army unless he commands the soul of his men, as well as their bodies and
legs." Here men capable of such leadership stepped forward, and those incapable
fell by the wayside.
North Africa is where American soldiers became
killing mad, where the hard truth about combat was first revealed to many. "It
is a very, very horrible war, dirty and dishonest, not at all that glamour war
that we read about in the hometown papers," one soldier wrote his mother in
Ohio. "For myself and the other men here, we will show no mercy. We have seen
too much for that." The correspondent Ernie Pyle noted a "new professional
outlook, where killing is a craft." North Africa is where irony and skepticism,
the twin lenses of modern consciousness, began refracting the experiences of
countless ordinary soldiers. "The last war was a war to end war. This war's to
start 'em up again," said a British Tommy, thus perfectly capturing the ironic
spirit that flowered in North Africa.
Sixty years after the invasion of North Africa,
a gauzy mythology has settled over World War II and its warriors. The veterans
are lionized as "the Greatest Generation," an accolade none sought and many
dismiss as twaddle. They are condemned to sentimental hagiography, in which all
the brothers are valiant and all the sisters virtuous. The brave and the
virtuous appear throughout the North African campaign, to be sure, but so do the
cowardly, the venal, and the fools. The ugliness common in later campaigns also
appears in North Africa: the murder and rape of civilians; the killing of
prisoners; the falsification of body counts.
It was a time of cunning and miscalculation, of
sacrifice and self-indulgence, of ambiguity, of love, of malice and mass murder.
There were heroes, but it was not an age of heroes as clean and lifeless as
alabaster at Carthage, demigods and poltroons lie side by side.
The United States would send sixty-one combat
divisions into Europe, nearly 2 million soldiers. These were the first. We can
fairly surmise that not a single man interred at Carthage cemetery sensed on
September 1, 1939, that he would find an African grave. Yet it was with the
invasion of Poland on that date that the road to North Africa began, and it is
then and there that our story must begin.
Copyright © 2002 Rick
Atkinson
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